Pop
morality quiz: An organization with offices in the United States has
assassinated a foreign spy in that agent's homeland, or tried to do
so. This is: A) right, B) wrong, C) legal, D) illegal, E) the kind
of activity U.S. and Cuban authorities should be investigating.
If you live in Miami there's a good chance your head
is already swirling with questions you want to ask before responding.
For example, was the target a spy for Tony Blair or that tyrant
Fidel Castro?
Comandos F-4 chief Rodolfo Frometa answers "A"
because the target was Juan Pablo Roque, post-Soviet Cuba's most
notorious spy. Roque is the debonair pilot who is now reviled in
el exilio for marrying a Miami girl, Ana Margarita Martinez,
then dumping her in an extreme example of putting his work before
his relationship. Their matrimony was part of Roque's cover identity
that enabled his infiltration of Brothers to the Rescue, the men who
flew Cessnas over the Florida Straits in the early to mid-Nineties
to spot hundreds of Cuban rafters trying to ride the Gulf Stream to
freedom, or at least a free-market economy. Roque split for Havana
in February 1996 just a few days before a Cuban MiG destroyed two
Brothers to the Rescue planes over the straits, killing four of the
group's members. An FBI investigation found that Roque had provided
information to his superiors in Havana related to the Brothers'
flight plans.
The alleged hit on Roque, according to Frometa,
occurred this past December 16 near the intersection of Ayesteran
and Boyeros in the El Cerro section of Havana. It was carried out by
several F-4 members based in Havana. A policeman named Luis Ramirez
Echeverria died in the shootout, as did one Ramon Sosa, a 32-year-old
member of the F-4 hit squad. Roque was severely wounded and
hospitalized. "I can't assure you that he is still alive," Frometa
said last week. "He could be dead already."
Frometa, a brooding 56-year-old with a black mega-goatee,
and his peppy blond-haired wife Teresa Diaz de Frometa were happy to
have New Times pay a visit last week to the F-4 headquarters
in Little Havana. She typed into a computer while he answered phone
calls in their two-room office, up a dingy flight of stairs from a
parking lot at the corner of West Flagler Street and SW Fourteenth
Avenue. The place resembles a low-end travel agency, except for the
montage of several dozen color snapshots that cover most of one wall.
In the middle is a picture of Roque. His visage is surrounded by
photos of men and women clad in combat gear and wielding machine
guns and pistols. In one Teresa is taking aim with a hefty 9mm
Beretta. Another shot shows a man (with Wite-Out painted over him to
conceal his identity) standing next to a Havana pay phone on which
he has just placed stickers containing F-4 propaganda. There is also
a photo of an apartment building where, according to Frometa's
island operatives, Roque resided until recently. A typed address
(Calle Paseo 1, #201, Apt. 33) is attached to the photo. "Everyone
who lives there works for the Cuban government," Frometa notes. And
a policeman guards the entrance.
In March 2001 Frometa testified at the federal trial
of five colleagues of Roque's who were arrested in 1998 for spying
on exile groups and conspiring to obtain classified information from
U.S. military bases. Frometa agreed to testify as a hostile defense
witness at the trial and acknowledged F-4 was engaged in acts of
violence in Cuba, including an arson attack on a bus. But the jurors
didn't buy the defense attorneys' basic argument -- that their
clients' presence in Miami was justified in order to monitor guys
like Frometa. A jury convicted them in June 2001 and found one of
them guilty of first-degree murder for complicity in the 1996
shootdown. They are serving sentences ranging from fifteen years to
life.
Despite his group's dedication to the goal of offing
Cuban police, spies, and anybody affiliated with the Castro regime,
Frometa has a warm, even childlike, demeanor. It is easy to imagine
him playing with his nine-year-old daughter and eight-year-old son.
There they are on the wall, sporting black berets and F-4 T-shirts,
marching down a street with their dad during a Little Havana
demonstration. (His other three offspring are now adults.)
Frometa also thinks "C" (legal) is a valid answer. He
maintains he has done no wrong under U.S. or Florida law because he
had no prior knowledge of the December 16 attack and played no role
in it. He was only the messenger, he asserts. At least Frometa
hopes "C" is correct since the FBI is aware of his claim. He's
almost certain his phone is tapped and office bugged. If true, it
shouldn't be surprising. In December 1994 a federal judge in Miami
sentenced him to three years in prison for trying to buy a Stinger
missile, three anti-tank rockets, and a grenade launcher from an
undercover FBI agent posing as a U.S. Army supply sergeant. Frometa
said he planned to use the weapons to kill Castro.
Despite such operational failures, Frometa remains
proud of his status in the Cuban exile, signified by a 1991 visit to
the U.S. State Department and Radio Martí, regular appearances with
Radio Mambí talk-show host Armando Perez-Roura to advocate armed
action against the Castro regime, and letters he's received from the
likes of U.S. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Gov. Jeb Bush, and Bill
Clinton.
In a letter dated July 8, 1996, Ros-Lehtinen wrote to
Frometa: "You told my aide, Yildris, that you are thankful for all
of the efforts that I and my staff have done on your case. You also
feel that, overall, I have done a great job in this year's Congress
and in the past. It is always a pleasure to hear such kind words and
such positive encouragement from a person such as yourself.... I am
glad that I have been able to satisfactorily serve you."
Today Frometa is still waiting for President George
W. Bush to respond to a letter he sent him last spring. The F-4
comandante said he was "worried" that he wasn't among the exile
leaders the White House invited to sit onstage behind GWB during the
president's speech last year at the James L. Knight Center. "I have
had the honor of being invited by your brother Jeb Bush to
participate in different political appearances and I was in Coconut
Grove supporting your campaign when you were aspiring to the
presidency," Frometa wrote. He noted a previous letter he sent to
the president the day after 9/11. "Comandos F-4 was one of the first
organizations to place itself at your orders to fight alongside the
armed forces of this great nation. It is for this reason that I
don't understand how we were overlooked for an event that was so
important for we who fight tirelessly for the liberation of our
Fatherland." But, he assured, he and his F-4 colleagues would
continue to be Republicans, friends of the Bush family, and
supporters of Gov. Jeb Bush.
Frometa had also sent a copy of the letter to Jeb,
who responded five months later as he entered the final four weeks
of his re-election campaign, which counted on Miami-Dade's legions
of excitable anti-Castro voters. "I have received the correspondence
that you wished to send to President George W. Bush and have
forwarded it to his office," Governor Bush wrote to Frometa in a
letter dated September 30, 2002. "If there is anything further I can
do to assist you, please let me know."
If Frometa seems crazed, or a "nut job" as one
knowledgeable U.S. government source describes him, it could have
something to do with several traumatic experiences involving the
Cuban revolution. Frometa had fought against the Batista
dictatorship as a teenager but quit the Revolutionary Army in 1963
when the Castro regime planned to send him to Moscow for military
training. Frometa finally fled Cuba in 1968, via the U.S. naval base
in Guantánamo, and settled in New York. He promptly joined the Alpha
66 paramilitary group and volunteered to fight in Vietnam, but the
U.S. Army never called him up.
His rage propelled him to fly from New Jersey to
Havana, legally, in 1981 to find recruits for armed sleeper cells on
the island. "My idea was to create opposition inside Cuba," he
explained, "to organize opposition against Castro inside Cuba
because I understood that when operations were attempted from
outside they didn't succeed because there was always an informant
and Castro would be waiting." But there were informants inside Cuba
too, and the Castro regime jailed Frometa for ten years.
He was further traumatized by the deaths of one of
his sons, his brother, and his father, for which he holds the Castro
regime responsible. According to Frometa, the son was killed in 1985
by fellow soldiers after he disobeyed an order to pick up and fire a
gun. Government agents ran over his brother with a car in 1986 after
he threatened to publicly denounce the torture of Rodolfo by prison
guards. His father, he says, died of a heart attack in 1987 after
learning that Rodolfo was in the "Rectangle of Death" in Havana's
Villa Marista prison, which Frometa describes as a rat and insect-infested
hole without toilets where prisoners were tortured and forced to
live without water for days at a time. (New Times could not
independently confirm Frometa's account.)
After he almost died during a 124-day hunger strike
in 1991, the Cuban government deported Frometa to Miami, where exile
leaders welcomed him as a hero. Three years later he was arrested
for the attempted Stinger-missile purchase.
In order to better adhere to the U.S. Neutrality Act,
which, among other things, prohibits the transport of weapons from
the United States to Cuba without a license, F-4 policy has changed
since his 1994 bust. "At that time I did plan to go blow the head
off Fidel Castro," Frometa admits. Now armed operations are planned
and executed by cells on the island. "This work has to be done by
the F-4 national directorate inside Cuba without physical contact
with me. They plan everything they are going to do and after they do
it -- they don't even explain to me how they're going to plan it --
they give the report so that I can make it known to the press.
Nowadays I function as the spokesman of F-4 in the United States. So
the leader who gives overall orders is in Cuba."
The Castro regime has denied the F-4 hit took place
on December 16 or any other day. But Cuban officials believe that
"B" and "D" (wrong and illegal) are the correct answers. On January
16 the president of Cuba's National Assembly, Ricardo Alarcón,
called a press conference to lambaste the FBI for not acting on "abundant
and detailed information" about activities terrorists in Miami were
planning against Cuba. He noted that two FBI agents received the
documents during a visit to Havana in June 1998. Two months later
the information was provided to the New York Times, which
Alarcón criticized for never publishing any of it. The following
month, adding insult to injury, FBI agents arrested fifteen Cuban
agents that Havana maintains were in Miami precisely to monitor anti-Castro
terrorists.
"The FBI is committing a crime by not detaining
terrorists, not investigating terrorists, and not putting an end to
terrorism," Alarcón fumed. A day after the press conference the
Cuban government delivered a diplomatic note to the U.S. Interests
Section in Havana. The note was prompted by Frometa's announcement
of the alleged Roque hit, Alarcón advisor Miguel Alvarez told New
Times. It was filed to protest the "impunity that these Miami-based
terrorists enjoy," he added.
A spokeswoman at the FBI's Miami-Dade field office
said the agency could not comment on Frometa's claim. Nor would she
comment on whether it was the kind of thing the FBI would
investigate.
Pop morality quiz question 2: An anti-exile group
assassinates a Cuban-American CIA agent in Miami, or tries to do so.
The head of the anti-exile group's Havana branch breaks the news but
insists he had no prior knowledge and no role in the attack. Cuban
government authorities remain silent. Such an attack would be A)
right, B) wrong, C) legal, D) illegal, E) something that U.S. and
Cuban law enforcement officials should be investigating.